A short scale for measuring attitudes towards the doctor-patient relationship: psychometric properties and measurement invariance of the German Patient-Practitioner-Orientation Scale (PPOS-D6)

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Roman Pauli - , RWTH Aachen University (Author)
  • Saskia Wilhelmy - , RWTH Aachen University (Author)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The Patient-Practitioner Orientation Scale (PPOS) was originally developed to compare doctor's and patient's consensus regarding patient centeredness. Research assumed PPOS measurements to be comparable across different groups of participants, however, without assessing the actual validity of this assumption. In this study, we investigate the psychometric properties and measurement invariance of a short version of the German translation of the PPOS.

METHODS: Based on a cross-sectional survey of N = 332 medical students, we present a short version of the German Patient-Practitioner-Orientation Scale (PPOS-D6) and examine its psychometric properties as well as measurement invariance across participants with varying levels of medical experience and gender using multigroup confirmatory factor analyses.

RESULTS: Results indicate that PPOS-D6 provides valid and reliable measurements of patient-centeredness that are invariant across participants with different medical experience. Preliminary results also suggest invariance across gender.

CONCLUSION: PPOS-D6 is a suitable and efficient measure to compare group-specific attitudes towards the doctor-patient interaction. Additional research on convergent and discriminant validity and divergent study samples is advised.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere12604
JournalPeerJ
Volume9
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2021
Peer-reviewedYes
Externally publishedYes

External IDs

PubMedCentral PMC8667738
Scopus 85121106802
ORCID /0000-0001-6650-8630/work/202354592

Keywords

Keywords

  • Multigroup confirmatory factor analysis, Patient-centered care, Doctor patient relationship, Measurement invariance, Shared decision-making